9 Answers

There are all manner of theories, but most of the more likely seeming are those that are to do with a lever or fulcrum, as in carrying/moving a load, or in old style farmer’s scales. If it wasn’t properly balanced, the one with short end was disadvantaged.

The scale would consist of a notched stick with baskets suspended at each end and a series of known weights used to measure the weight of produce being offered. If the merchant buying the produce shortened one end, he could make the seller appear to be providing less than he was.

I assumed it’s the same as “drew the short straw”. ie, when trying to determine who has to do something, someone grabs a stick, breaks it into two unequal parts, and then holds both parts in his hand so that the comparative lengths are not visible. Someone then picks one of the available ends of the stick. Who ever gets the short end has to do it.

I understood it came from a game similar to drawing straws. A stick was picked up and in turn people clamp their fist around it, gradually going along the stick, until you end up being the last one to still get a bit of stick. You’d then be the volunteer, having ended up with the short end of the stick.

@Marina : That’s a good source, but I don’t understand how having a shorter stick means you have the “short end of the stick”. When I hear “short end of the stick” I think of one stick with two ends and two people that have either end. :/